Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- 1 Introduction
- 2 Chaos: tools and concepts
- 3 Chaos in classical mechanics
- 4 Chaos in quantum mechanics
- 5 The kicked rotor: paradigm of chaos
- 6 Microwave-driven surface state electrons
- 7 The hydrogen atom in a strong microwave field
- 8 The kicked hydrogen atom
- 9 Chaotic scattering with CsI molecules
- 10 The helium atom
- 11 Chaos in atomic physics: state of the art and research directions
- References
- Index
4 - Chaos in quantum mechanics
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 14 September 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- 1 Introduction
- 2 Chaos: tools and concepts
- 3 Chaos in classical mechanics
- 4 Chaos in quantum mechanics
- 5 The kicked rotor: paradigm of chaos
- 6 Microwave-driven surface state electrons
- 7 The hydrogen atom in a strong microwave field
- 8 The kicked hydrogen atom
- 9 Chaotic scattering with CsI molecules
- 10 The helium atom
- 11 Chaos in atomic physics: state of the art and research directions
- References
- Index
Summary
Einstein (1917) appreciated early on that within the “old” pre-1925/26 quantum mechanics absence of integrability is a serious obstacle for the quantization of classical systems. Therefore, in retrospect not surprisingly, the quantization problem was not adequately solved until the advent of the “new” quantum mechanics by Heisenberg, Born, Jordan and Schrödinger. The new quantum mechanics did not rely at all on the notion of classical paths, and this way, unwittingly, sidestepped the chaos problem. Within the framework of the new theory, any classical system can be quantized, including classically chaotic systems. But while the quantization of integrable systems is straightforward, the quantization of classically chaotic systems, even today, presents a formidable technical challenge. This is especially true for quantization in the semiclassical regime, where the quantum numbers involved are large. In fact, efficient semiclassical quantization rules for chaotic systems were not known until Gutzwiller (1971, 1990) intoduced periodic orbit expansions. Gutzwiller's method is discussed in Section 4.1.3 below. It is important to emphasize here that the existence of chaos in certain classical systems in no way introduces conceptual problems into the framework of modern quantum theory, although, let it be emphasized again, chaos came back with a vengeance from the “old” days of quantum mechanics. Even given all the modern day computer power accessible to the “practitioner” of quantum mechanics, chaos is the ultimate reason for the slow progress in the numerical computation of even moderately excited states in such important, but chaotic problems as the helium atom.
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- Chapter
- Information
- Chaos in Atomic Physics , pp. 83 - 116Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1997